Your personal relationship manager will support you in all your financial matters, from the targeted accumulation and long-term preservation through to the passing on of your assets. He is able to make full use of our comprehensive range of services and draw on the same skills and investment solutions as LGT’s owners, the Princely House of Liechtenstein.

On behalf of their institutional and private clients, the asset management specialists of LGT Capital Partners search worldwide for attractive investment opportunities and the best portfolio managers. They also manage a substantial share of the wealth belonging to LGT’s owner, the Princely House of Liechtenstein.

We see wealth not as an end in itself but also as a means of creating social and cultural added value. As a successful business, we feel an obligation, across all our locations, to make our own contribution toward a society worth living in.

Since it was founded over 90 years ago, LGT has grown from a small regional bank to an international private bank employing over 3000 staff in more than 20 locations worldwide. However, it remains an independent family company. And our most important duty is still to manage our clients’ assets diligently and rigorously.

Are you an able and dedicated individual who acts with integrity? If so, then you have come to the right place. We will foster your individual strengths and invest in your personal further development. At LGT, you can play an active role in helping to shape your field of activity and area of operations. It is important to us that you are satisfied in the long term with the company and with the work you do.

A Paris ePrix to forget

May 22, 2017

At the ePrix in the heart of Paris ABT Schaeffler Audi Sport experienced a day to forget. Having most recently clinched three podium positions in a row, the team, for the first time since May 2015, scored no points on a Formula E race day. In just three weeks’ time the squad’s home rounds will be held in Berlin, giving the team the chance to quickly make up for today.

Having started only from position 13 after a difficult qualifying, Lucas di Grassi became entangled in a collision with a rival on lap 16 and lost a few positions. Subsequently, following the mandatory pit stop with the car change, his team sent him back out too early, which earned the South American a drive-through penalty. In pursuit of the fastest race lap di Grassi finally touched the wall and was forced to retire – finishing his first race out of the points this season.

One of the secret stars of the second ePrix in Paris that was again held in front of a full house and in an impressive setting was Daniel Abt – up until a few metres in front of the finishing line. With great overtaking manoeuvres, the German battled his way forwards from grid position 16 to sixth place before a fault in the battery management system (BMS) caused his car to stop behind the safety car half a lap before the finish. It would have been the fifth top-seven result in succession for Abt.

In three weeks’ time the squad’s home rounds will be held in Berlin, giving the team the chance to quickly make up for this day.